CHITBOT, OF val De Baaet part of Hot The diameter of the | ERD The 0; ford Water Boiler at the bottom, 4 gic. he are dumped by a few extra turns, We would like to Oxford Hot Water | our book ? It's free, gon ny Pret oo around the most active triangular revolving grate is hollow, allowing immense ai live coals to " t without its ashes, Sx off by a turn: of contents of the grate tell you more about the Boiler. * Will you write for 1007 * THE GURNEY FOUNDRY CO., Limited Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Calgary Vancouver 0 0 0 Nex fay, |& Notice of Removal - Some two months ago § 2'we 'moved office and all © abput 50 feet. FLAKES t Monday, will ADA OOOOOOO00 14th 8 remove to § '| Jilted by some duchess. His favorite "slon; and 1s so In all time to come. The kan 'old. man and, woman, = caretakaérs, ove a Ho0tat Be hath turned 3 1 ul d rn rine, on fet strand?' a Te breathe, go, mark him well! © . For him no minstrel raptures swell; High though his titles, proud his name, Boundless his wealth as wish can claim. Despite those iltles, power and pelf, +d The wretch, concen all In self, Living, shall fortsit renown, And, doubly dying, go down To the vile dust 1 gfice ne sprung ¢ oh a. aa Carlton Lodge; Cheltenham, the ic artist, who & descendant from Humphrey Jeanings of Erdington Hall, through Mary, grandmother of Humphrey, who married Henry Guest of Kinver, Joseph Guest, Mr, Herbert's grandfath spent most of his lite jn' collecting proof of Me adn to the personal property of pounds. returning from " Guest was over d sustained in- death. He had e his interview and to make his will. The news of the death of husband brought on an fliness, resulted in the death of Mrs. his wife. Tops Pavia Jurnines gpne over the pedigree with Mr, rbert, and admits that he is a col- x . The two branches of the fam- Of the Jennings--the Warwickshire and Staffordshire--have been working together harmoniously from the begin- Ring of the suit, and Mr. Jennings says that If he is successful he shall see that they have their just share. A case clent origin. According to Viscount Wolseley (vide "Life of Duke of Marl ; the family were entitled to bear arms from the edrliest period. Lord Valentfa sdid that the founder of the family' was Jean de Mangis, a knight from Mangls in Burgandy, who ¢ame over to England in the reign of Henry II, corrupted first to Jennan- &l8, and afterwards to Jennings. The Staffordshire branch are of Kin: ship to Bir Stephen Jennings, who was born at Wolverhampton, and who was A number of the family seemed to have embarked in trade, and through suc- cess speculation accumulated for tunes, all culminating in the great wealth amassed by William Jennings of Acton Place, Acton, near Long Mel- ford, Suffolk. He was the richest com- moner in England in the time of Wil Ham IIL That monarch was his god- father, and visited him at his Suffolk mansiof. A bed was once in existence at Acton Place, the hangings of which Were lined with the sheets of William LIL Willlam Jennings (known gener ally as Willlam the Rich) was & man Of eccehtric habits. He lived rather misanthropical life, and report says he Was disappointed in love, having been dog was named The Duchess, When the dog died he had a tomb erected in Acton grounds. to the memory of his canine favorite, and that tomb is still in 'existence. The arms of William Jennings Az. a' chevron between three plumifiéts, sa. The other branch- ex of the family all bear. plummets, but diftéfently arrayed, and the crests, too, are rot the same. 'The arms are soulp- tu on the magnificent marble tomb sun. Acton Church. The tomb was erected by Annie Carew Suldot, the wife of Robert Jennings, father of Wil- llam, and represents Robert reclining at full length, and leaning over him is the figure of his wife, Charles Jennings, another member of this distinguished family, lived in great State at Gopsall Hall. He wrote "the librettos for Handel's oratories. There Was & paragraph in a newspaper some time ago, In which it was suggested that as the Jennings case had been so many years iff chancery, and the own- ers of a portion of the estates so long in fon, the of limitations may 'bat all claim made by the new claimant. The following extract from hotes: of the Court of Appeal may, however, be quoted to show that the Judges think differently: Willis v. Bar! Howe, Court of Ap: peal, 1893 (page 427). Before Justices Lindley, Bryant 'North and Kay.--In Mr. Justice Kay's summing up these words occur: "When Charlotte Howe took forcible possession of some of the estates for an infant son, George Augustus William, that was an intru- Possession ef an intruder is inet fectual for the transfer of title, and left no claim upon the title of the rightful owner, and no secret process of work in dny time for the benefit of any casual intefloper or lucky vagrant would be a bar to the true owner. The right heir stands in the same position o-day' as he Aid before the intrusion 5 Lelford, Suffolk, the magnificent mansion' of Willfam Jennings, who died Intestate, was uninhabited, except by S, © No. next-ofkin making claim, Charlotte Mowe. took possession. ---- a "Thre Swallows." Ji "Power and. Son's "Thres or Whiskey, famous for ighest _atandard The Jennings family are of very anv | out doubt one of th test glori f Also Lord Mayor of London in 1700. Irefa ® Sreateat glories 0 J > Walter Scott. Loh GAINSBOROUGH, THE ARTIST, He Painted Portraits For & Living and Landscapes For Pleasure. Hived at gt gave such a 'work, because of his own sim- ple, lovable rn 8 He had beau- ty in Blself, and RN ie Ife it fed on simple delights--t| ys of nature, of domestic happiness, of music and of his owt art, g 'He was born in the Mttle town of Sudbury, on the river Stour, in the beautiful County of Suffolk. As a boy he loved to ramble fn the country, sketching, chd showed so much inclin- ation for it and so little for any other kind of study that when he was Af- teen he was sent to London and placed under the care of a silversmith, who procured him admission to the St. ug year was aff eventful one. He hired three rooms in Hatton gardens and set up as a painter on his own account. Meeting With little encouragement, he returned to Sudbury. There he fell a victim to the charms of a young lady of seven- teen, Miss Margaret Burr, who had an annuity of $1,000, married het and es- tablished himself in the country town of Ipswich. Here he worked on hap- Plly and quietly for fifteen years, con- tinually studying in the open air and executing such small commissions for portraits as came to him, until he had Succeeded in discovering for himself a manner of painting suited to hig needs 5d had developed an ext rdinary ski! In 1760 he moved to Bath, at that time the most fashionable city outside of London. The gay world of that time congregated there to drink the 'waters, Gainsborough's success was immediate, but with increasing wealth there was no alteration fn his simple method of living--Charles H, Caffin in St. Nicholas, eis Irish Language. Among the many languages that ex- ist to-day is the Gaelic or Irish lan- Juage, a tongue which to what it technically edlled 'the Citic. branch of the Indo-European family of lan- guages; which has monuments going back to an extraordinarily early period; Which has been called more flexible than the Greek, more subtle than the French, more comprehensive than the German and yet more conelse than the ancient Hebrew, and which, with its wonderful copious literature, is with. nd. The Irish language has this Pecullarity, that amid the tribulation and suffering ane tryanny which have made up the istory of the race; its language still remains intact. There is, perhaps, besides the Irish; only one oth- er race which has, through chance and change, through chaos and circum- stance, preserved intact its national language--that is the Hebrew race, ------ Had Quite Enough, A very subdued-looking boy of about twelve years of age, with a long scratch on his nose and an air of gen- eral defection, went to the master of one of the board schools and handed him a note from his mother before {ak- Ing his seat and becoming deeply ab- sorbed in a book. The note read as follows: "Mr. Brown,--Please excufe James for not being present yesterday. ' He played trooant, but you don't need to thrash him for it, as the boy he play- ed trooant with an' him fell 'out, an' the boy fought him, an' a man thiéy throo at caught him, an' thrashed him, an' the driver of a cart they hug on to thrashed him allso. Then his father thrashed him, an' I haa to glve him another one for being impoodent to me for telling his father, so you need not thrash him until next time, He thinks he better keep in school in future." --------e ii A Maid of Honor. : The late Lady Bloomfield was a mata of henor and published a book of re- miniscences relating some very inti timate Incidents of her years at court. The result, the London dent of The Manchester Guardian tells, was that the Queen forbade her ladies to Reep diaries while they were in waiting, and from that rule grew one of the test repartees that the heart of the professional diarist could desire. A young lady who had just bean appoint ed a mald of honor was receiving eon- Bratulations at a party, and her host sald: "What an interesting journal you can keep!" The girl told him that Journal keeping was forbidden, and the answer was: "But I think I should keep one, all the same." "Then," sald the girl, "whatever you were you would not be & maid of honor." -------- Cow for Wayfarers. A curious cusjom still hoids good In the Village of Waddesdon, in Bucking hamshire, where, on any morning or evening of the year you can claim a free dfink of new milk from a cow Specially kept for the benefit of way- farers. The animal is known locally a8 the "alms cow," und when she dies another has to be provided by thé par ish authorities. . -------------------- © Deep Sea Exploration, The® English Admiraity intends to sénd"§ deepses exploring expedition to the Indian Ocean. One of the meme bers be Stanley Gardiner, the well known. coral expert, vm Lifebuoy Soap -- disinfectant -- is recommended by the medical { as a safeguard against in- | Majesty Sin diseases. § iam Swain, piano tuner. Orders THE BUREAU OF LABOR. Interesting Details In the Fifth Annual Report of the Department. The fifth annual report of the Labor Bureau shows that during 1904 there were 54 trade disputes resulting in strikes in Ontario, involving 171 sstab- lshments and 8,945 persons. An ag- gregate of $78 days was covered hy each dispute being 14.41 days, or 10.18 days per person, with 82 dis. putes, involving 429 establishments, 10, 564 persons, aggregating 994 days, an average of 12.12 days to each dispute, and 10.62 days per person in 1903, The establishments reporting to the sons. The gross value of thelr aggre. gate product was $25,714,296; the amount paid in wages $4,400,626, an an- nual average earning of $382.56 per per- son. The percentage labor cost of pro- duction was 17.15, as against 21.69 in 1901, and 25 in 1903. clerks of cities, towns and villages to a elrcular inquiry as to the opportunity existing in their municipalities. These replies are very valuable, and one can- not help being struck by the variety of business opportunities throughout the Province, The plan of gathering such information has been warmly com- mended by the editor of Commercial Intelligence, London, in a Jetter written to the bureau. A number of statistics of interest to all workers and employes, legal decisions affecting the relations between employer and employes, a synopsis of the labor laws of Ontario, the factory act, with the latest revis- fons thereto, and much other useful and valuable information is comprised in the report. y He Tried to Follow Directions. Dr. Willlam Osler, formerly of Johns Hopkins, now regius professor of medi- cine at Oxford, was talking, during his recent Canadian tour, about the im- Martin's Lane Academy. Here he work: | PO! ce of precision In the writing of ed for three years studying he marie | pebscriptions. anal A's ol \ "Wherever a sentence may have two meanings," sald Dr. Osler, "rest as- sured that the wrong meaning will be taken. Hence, it is important in pre- scription writing and in directions to patients that the greatest clarity and precision be obtained. "A young foreigner one day visited a physician and described a common malady that had befallen him. "'The thing for you to do" the physiclan sald, 'is to drink hot water an hour before breakfast every morn- ing.' " "Write it down, doctor, so I won't forget It' said the patient. "Accordingly the physician wrote the directions down -- namely, that the young man was to drink hot water an hour before breakfast every morning. "The patient took his leave, and in a week he returned. " 'Well, how are you feeling? the physician asked. * 'Worse, doctor, worse, it anything,' was the reply. "'Ahem. Did you follow my advice and drink hot water an hour before breakfast? "I did my best, sir; sald the young than ten minutes at a stretch'" - « Mdhogany's Rise. ' Mahogany as a cahinet wood was discovered by Dr. Gibbons, a physician of some note in England In the latter half of the seventeenth century. The docior's brother was a sea captain in the West Indies trade, and on one oc casion the captain brought over as bal last some logs of this wood, vent Ganden, and the brother suggest- ed that this wood, which lay in the ship's hold, might be of value as beams. It was brought up from the docks, but the workmen could not work It with their tools and the logs were rolled into the garden, out of the way. Here they lay for a long time with- ont attention being paid them, until one day a candle box was needed, and the physician suggested that the old logs in the garden might furnish good ma- terial. The carpenter had one of them re- moved to his shop, but complained, as work the material with his tools. The doctor became interested and ordered and proved to be so handsome that a bureau was made up from another of the logs This was handsomely finished, and was declared by experts to be so su- perlor to other woods that a craze for mahogany set in, largely fostered by the Duchess of Buckinghom. The King's Pay Day. King Edward receives a quarterly cheque from the Paymaster-Geéneral for his salary as monarch; the cheque is what 'is known as a negotiable re- celpt, and is sent to the keeper of the privy purse, by whom it is signed on behalt of the King, ana then lodged to the credit of His Majesty's private banking account, Trees That Furnish Water, No one need die of thirst ih Aus- tralia it eucalyptus trees are near By cutting a sapling into sections of about ten feet and standing them perpendi- cularly with the small ends down, half- a pint of water may be obtained in 15 minutes. : 1,000 Islands And Rochester. North King and Caspian leave daily except Monday, at 10.15 a.m., for Thousand = Islands, calling at Alexan- dria Bay, Rockport and Gananoque. Returning leave at 5 p.m. for Bay of Quinte ports and Rochester. memes Ministers, lawyers, teachers, and others Whose occupation gives but little exercise, should use Carterlg Lit- tle Liver Pills for torpid liver and Tousness. One is a dose. Try them. At Davis', shoulder hams, (boneless) half or whole ham, 12ic. a 1b, DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED by tocal applications, as they cannot reach diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and. that is by constitutional i Deafness is caused by an inflamed con- dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in- flatned you have a rumbling sound or im- perfoce hearing, and when it is entirely losed, Deafness ie the result. and unless the inflammation can taken out and His tube restored on, to its notmal condi- hearing will be destroyed forever : nine cases out of ten are caused hy Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflam- ed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness jeaused by Catarrh) that cannot be cured hy Hall's Catarrh Cure, §, free. FP. J. CHENEY & €O., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggis received at MeAuley's book store, its, 75¢. Take Hall's Fawily Pills for econstic pation, - ¥ the strikes, the average duration of | bureau were 174, employing 11,603 per- | The report includes the replies of ; man, "but I couldn't keep it up more | The doctor was then building in Co- i the others had done, that he could not | that heavier tools be made, and after { a delay the candle box was finished, | McClarys Pandora "ICATS THAT SATISFY Lard that sults all requirements is = Laing's Lard LARD COMPOUND -- the finest Compound: Lard obtaigable. Made of the purest jogre- dients and low in price. PURE LARD--Made from Leaf Lard and Pork Trimmings. Pure and good. Certain to give entire satisfaction. : KETTLE LARD -- Made of the finest Leaf Lard and rendered in open. Kettles. Nothing fifer can be had. Your grocer probably has these three grades. If not,.let us know and we will see that you are supplied. ; 1 The Laing Packing @. Provision Company, Limited. Montreal. | Pandora Reservoir The Pandora is the only range with a reser- voir stamped in one single piece of steel and enamelled. It is the only : reservoir without seams, rivets or places to catch dirt. It has no sharp angles. All angles are made with rounding curves, and the whole reservoir is beautifully enamelled. McClary's are the only range makers in Canada with a plant for making enamelled steel reservoirs, and that is why the Pandora is the only range that has a one-piece reservoir. Warchouses and Factories: London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouve-, St. John, N.B., Hamilton Range - "Lemmon & Sons. Sole Agents. | 980+ sareansaasan an 20 ° ON 3 Decisive Savings In Raincoats OME IN TO-DAY for the best bargain of the year in Raincoats.. Every garment in the store has been specially underpriced, although many have been here only a few weeks. Heavy shipments of b new goods are on the way, however, and space is be- § coming very valuable to us--so down go the prices on these stylish cravenettes :-- $ 5.00 Coats for....$3.75 $ 6.00 Coats for..$ 4.50 7 50 Coats for.... 5.63 8.50 Coats\ for.. 6.38 9.00 Coats for.... 6.75 9.90 Coats for. . 7-43 11.50 Coats for.... 863 13.50 Coats for. . 10.13 {, SPENCE'S, ™'=itumn. OPP ++crcvsrscacca SEATBELT vss sss s sss Coal Oil St We have a large assortment of Coal Oil Stoves which we will sell for the balance of this month at a : Discount of 15% And ranging in price from 65c. to $10. 'We have also a large assortment of SCREEN DOORS which we will sell at cost. : ELLIOTT BROS .. 77 Princess Street. J.B. C. DOBBS & 00.. 171 WELLINGTON STREET, y Type tHiS/S ahd Siayutes eg DID YOU EVER THINK That Fire Insurance does not cover the loss of valuable papers or tamily jewelry. A SMALL SAFE is a cheap precaution. Call and See Them, and DO IT NOW ! some the Best fi "SAI Ceylon Tea. Posit delicious tea in the Sold only in lead packets, Highest A EE ------ LADIES' PATE We have just rece Shoes, made with hea eyelets, all sizes. Pric Trunks & Suit Ca We have just receivec other shipment of Trunks Suit Cases. If you are th ing of getting somethin; that line you had bette: ours. Suit Cases for $2 lock and belts. Hi. JENNINGS, King COOLING and HEALTH Everybody should drink MINERAL WAT Particularly at this season, especially when it can be procu such a reasonable price. Mack, that celebrated water fro famous Mack Springs, St Catheri: only 85c. a dozen, and there is n betler We have all the others--Appolli White Rock, Rednor, Red Ravin, Lc derry, Lithia, ete., in pints and sp Use only water from a Pure M Spring. JAS. McPARLA] 339 and 341 King St. *Phone 274. SAFE STORAGE 'Phone . bave Furniture, Carr etc., to store, send them | We have large space and=use great c handling your goods. Charges mod W. G. Fros City Storage, 299 Queen Sf Painting of Vehicles a Speciall CARRIAGES and BUGG FOR SALE 1 Kensington, second-hand, good order; 1 Makedo, secon hand; 1 Phaeton; 1 road wa gon; also new Top Buggie Runabouts with rubber tire also a few sets of Harness lof Call and see for yourse JAMES LATURN 390 PRINCESS STREET. NOwW Is the time for spring renovation und every one who intends to build or remodel their pre- It you Pianos, expert advice and All out material first class an kman are mechanics. worl David Hall 68 Brook Street. 'Phone DENTAL DR. A. E. KNAPP, B.A, LDS. | 19 Montreal St., Cor. Princess Phone 652, All branches of Dentistry skilfulls formed. Nitrous Oxide Gas ysed I traction of teeth.